thoughts
provocateur
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027151906/http://www.geocities.com/libramoon.geo/thoughts.htm
Violence is learned as the appropriate reaction
to anger and frustrations. In the media and on
the streets, violence is glorified and rewarded.
Poverty both material and emotional is endured,
but not quietly. Violent reactions are visited
especially on the families and neighbors
themselves subject to these brutalizing environments,
as well as upon those who are materially better off,
in the form of all manner of violent crime.
The criminal justice system seems to only reflect and
propagate the brutalizing conditions which do nothing
to ameliorate the hate, pain, frustrations in an
endless cycle of violence, victimizing victims and
perpetrators and numbing the sensibilities of the
professionals who attempt to work within the system.
The education system fails to educate in most of the
areas that we need to understand to function in our world.
How much do we learn in school (or even at home or on
the streets) about basic health and safety, financial
management, childcare, legal rights and responsibilities,
building meaningful relationships, building self-esteem,
building and maintaining a home? Instead, most of what
our young people learn in the schools that they must spend
most of their formative years attending seems to be more
destructive and counterproductive than truly useful.
The quality of life we can look forward to is the quality
of life we teach our children to expect and produce.
And in the present we live out the expectations we are
producing today. Yet, what am I doing to promote a better
world? I see the misfortunes around me, and feel hopelessly
frustrated, beyond any attempt at change. "I am, after all,
only one relatively powerless person," I say, and go on
with my daily chores, which, after all, leave me little
time or energy for doing battle with the powers that shape my
surroundings.
I have come up with several ideas which I believe would,
if implemented, result in a happier world. I do not
expect you to agree with my ideas. In fact, I would be
highly gratified if you would disagree, and in your
disagreement develop or expand ideas of your own which
you might share, thereby increasing the energy expended
toward positive change in opposition to the apathy or
uselessly expended anger against vague or inappropriate
targets which, I fear, are overwhelming our healthier impulses.
And, if by chance you do agree with any of my ideas,
perhaps you could expand on them or help to devise more
effective methods of implementation than I have yet been
able to imagine. It is said that imagination can be a
powerful tool toward change. Perhaps the opening of channels
of communication for our positive imaginings might help us to
create a world in which we could be prouder and happier to live.
As one who is socially libertarian and fiscally green, I wish to see a
minimalization of governmental interference in our daily lives, and for
any such interference to make sense, to promote the conservation of our
shared natural environment and a healthy shared eco-system, and to take
account of the true costs in terms of the environment and individual human
needs. That is the way to add a spiritual dimension to our shared culture.
I have a suggestion which would include highly informative and
electrifying television/web coverage which could help to
ameliorate some of the strife in various world trouble spots.
Possibly sponsored by the UN, or other groups which are
interested in promoting dialog, in centers of troubled areas
town-hall-type meetings (such as had been made popular by
President Clinton) could be organized to allow regular, every-day
people who represent the various sides in their controversies to
speak and dialog on live, international television. Strict
security would make sure that no weapons would be allowed in the
venue, but there would be no holds barred on what these people
could say so that all issues could be expressed as well as any
suggestions for working out these issues. In coordination with
these meetings, a web-page could be dedicated to the project with
transcripts of the meetings and a forum for anyone to respond
with their comments and suggestions, possibly including a live
chat room. Alongside these town meetings, videoconferences could
be arranged to air live on international television for leaders
of the various groups in the controveries. The transcripts of
these videoconferences and opportunities for comment/suggestions
could also be provided on the web-page.
Just about whenever a proposal is made to improve social/
ecological conditions by making changes in some industry we are
subjected to a ballyhoo about the potential loss of jobs which
may ensue. It would make more sense and be more sensitive to the
needs of both our world and the individuals concerned if
provisions were generally available to make involuntary
unemployment less hazardous. For instance, various jobs become
obsolete as new technology or new perceptions of consumer needs,
etc. emerge, which also can lead to the creation of new classes
of jobs. All that is needed to bring the employee from doing job
A to job B is training in the new job. Contrary to the popular
myth that long years of schooling are necessary to learn skills
relevant to employment in most fields, most actual
day-to-day job skills are learned on the job. Whatever
background knowledge is needed can generally be learned
concomitant with job skills in on-site training classes or in
specific job-related training programs. These need not be
particularly expensive and could be funded as part of employer
overhead along with lower salaries while the employee is in
training and perhaps tax advantages or other public incentives.
Small businesses could be funded to train or retrain unemployed
people for the jobs they need filled. Unlike large corporations,
small businesses would find it difficult to pay for job specific
training, thereby limiting their employment opportunities to
those already having specific skills. Since most new jobs are
with small businesses, people laid off from other work or
otherwise unskilled in the specific areas needed by these small
businesses are at a disadvantage in gaining employment. Job
training funds could be distributed through tax incentives, local
jobs-related agencies, the Small Business Administration, or even
retraining grants given directly to the job seeker through
unemployment compensation offices. Projects beneficial to
communities could be undertaken by local small businesses and
paid for by government grants, including monies for hiring and
(re)training workers. The businesses would then be able to
complete these projects, and still have their systems in place
for continued employment of people for other, private or public,
projects. For those who may lose highly paid positions, a
private unemployment insurance investment might be advised. For
those in low-paid, high-turnover jobs, the public schools,
community centers and other groups might provide low or no cost
training linked to local business needs. In fact, high school
job-training programs linked with local businesses could provide
incentive for teens to stay in school and give them opportunities
for immediate earning power, which could have the added benefit
of lessening teen crime. Another system for job skill and
readiness training could be overseen by private enterprise.
Private employment services providing career counseling, personal
empowerment counseling and interface with agencies to provide for
the clients' needs both while in training and while in transition
to employment, along with specific job skills training and
general employment skills training could become commonplace in
every community where employment is an issue. These services
would be available to anyone needing them and paid for by the
individual clients, either through their own resources or through
government loans (to be repaid when the client obtains
employment, at a fair rate). These employment training services
would only be eligible for government loans if they could prove a
consistently high percentage of their clients had success in
obtaining and keeping employment. The training offered should be
in a variety of job skills keyed to individual aptitudes and the
kinds of jobs generally available or projected to have a high
potential for availability. The employment training services
could negotiate contracts with members of the business community
to train for specific jobs with guaranteed employment to
qualified graduates. They could also provide business skills
training to help and encourage entrepreneurial talent.
Meanwhile, it would behoove we-as-society to provide a cushion of
financial resources to get all of us who for any reason may face
financial instability through our individual crises without
turning to crime, begging or a condition of hopeless
homelessness. The current social services complex and
unemployment insurance system are not working; and neither is the
current attitude of holier-than-thouness towards those of us
without financial resources. Perhaps, rather than acting as if
those with jobs were entitled to keep them no matter what the
social cost, we could develop an attitude of real economic
consciousness and plans to safeguard everyone's right to a
livelihood, not as charity but in the original sense of insurance
to provide against calamity. We could also aim toward more
flexibility in employment-employee relationships, more community
awareness and involvement and a real commitment to
community/work/industry/ economics as if both the Earth and the
individual mattered. For instance, it would be universally
beneficial to do away with the standard 9 to 5 work hours. Many
industries already have shift work, flexible hours, etc. Use of
resources generally could be more efficient and workers'
individual schedules better accommodated if individually-based
work hours were the norm. We could certainly do away with the
rush-hour traffic situation we all loathe. Those who function
better at certain hours of the day could work during their hours
of peak performance. Childcare arrangements could be more easily
accommodated. In that regard, there are many jobs which could be
done wholly or partially in the home, allowing for both dependent
care and paid work, geared to the mutual convenience of the
worker and employer. For site-specific jobs, on-site dependent
care would certainly be helpful. Currently employed workers
could also benefit from flexibility allowing for expanded skills
training to prepare for a greater variety of possible jobs. In
other words, it's time for flexibility rather than rigidity in
the structuring of our work lives. Tangentially, why not make it
simpler, easier for independent small businesses to get going --
simplify the regulations, not in regard to true safety or
environmental standards, but in regard to economically engendered
standards. Keep the rules clear and simple and easy to access,
understand and implement. Make it easier for people without
means but with ambition and ideas to get low cost loans, business
management training and whatever other foothold they need to
develop truly local, community businesses keyed to the
community's needs and desires.
A framework of so-called "12-step programs" has
been developed to help people deal with addictions to substances.
However, at least part of that framework could be modified to
help people to deal with the hot buttons in their lives that
lead to committing violent acts. I am thinking of some group
maybe called Violence Anonymous which could be initiated in
various community settings, staffed by volunteers (who would
eventually be long-term program participants but initially could
be people who are concerned about these issues, maybe from law
enforcement or religious groups or just community volunteers),
available 24/7 for anyone who finds themselves fighting violent
urges and needs somewhere to go, maybe to talk to others who
have experienced/are experiencing similar feelings, maybe to
listen to those others vent and share their feelings and
experiences, maybe to just have a good old-fashioned "time-out."
Once the groups are formed, members could sponsor each other as
in AA, to be available to talk one-on-one until the need for
violence passes. I don't know about the actual "12 Steps."
Maybe they could be adapted to this new forum. And judges could
mandate VA sessions to family batterers, people involved in
public brawls, etc. -- for a specified amount of time and then
as needed once the erstwhile defendant has had a chance to work
with the group and find out how it works for them. An adjunct
program could also be developed, VV -- Victims of Violence --
for, obviously, victims of violence, where they could find
others who understand, to whom they could vent their feelings,
from whom they could hear others stories and coping mechanisms,
or to just have a safe place to go when needed. There could be
made available in the community setting where the VV groups meet
referral resources for shelters, medical help, legal help,
whatever is seen as needed. Volunteers could make sure the
setting was staffed at all times with someone who has had
training in working with trauma victims, and eventually staffed
with long-term participants. The focus of VA and VV would be
not in blaming the perpetrator of violence or the victim, but
in joining together as a community against the common enemy,
the violent behavior itself.
The issue of a right to life is certainly more complex than the
media image that right-to-life groups portray. Totally apart
from the issues of women's rights over their own bodies and the
morality of sexual activity, there remains the very compelling
issue of quality of life. I am speaking here not only of the
quality of life potentially available to the unwanted yet to be
born child or the potential quality of life for the mother to be
and other members of her family, both very important issues
indeed, but also of the quality of life for us all in the
extended family of society, including those children who are very
much wanted. I am talking about finite resources and how they
are to be distributed. I am talking about child abuse and its
far-reaching effects in the escalation of violence and misery. I
am also talking about the messages we give to people, young girls
of child-bearing age in particular, but all the rest of us as
well, about our responsibilities, to our children, to ourselves,
to our communities, and to our world. There are, of course,
many reasons why a particular pregnancy may not be appropriate
for a particular person at a particular time. Among these are
the age and health of the prospective mother, the circumstances
surrounding the conception (such as incest or rape), the career
goals that may be shattered, the existence of other children or
dependents whose demands of time and energy may be usurped, and,
certainly, economic factors precluding the proper care of mother
and child. Regarding these economic factors, a question I think
appropriate to ask those who carry the banner of right-to-life
is, who is to pay these costs to create a real life for these
children that you say should be saved? Some may be adopted into
families who have the means and desire to raise them, but
certainly not all. I know I would have a great deal more respect
for these crusaders of conscience were they to contribute a
sizable percentage of their formidable resources -- time, energy
and cash -- toward a right to quality life campaign for these
children: providing quality childcare options, quality living
spaces, quality medical care, quality educational opportunities
for both children and parents, quality nutrition including
prenatal nutrition, quality counseling for troubled families,
etc., etc. Can you do that? Can you truly take responsibility
for your beliefs? Or is the extent of your commitment merely to
make life more difficult for those already facing insurmountable
challenges? And, you know, the sword of governmental interference
cuts both ways. There have been many cases of women forced to
end their pregnancies against their will by legal fiat. This is
obviously a very personal issue, over which only the individuals directly
involved deserve to have control.
I have already written to the tax authorities about allowing us
a line on our tax forms to tell them of particular government
expenditures we do or do not want our individual tax bills
subsidizing -- ultimately it would probably all cancel out and
the resultant budget be no different, but at least we would have
a chance to make our preferences known in a more specific way
than by the ballot -- of course this has not been done. However,
I suggest a much more sweeping reform than this. I suggest that
we do away with personal income tax and personal property taxes
on single family primary residences.
I suggest that we try financing our governmental projects via
sales tax. After all, we do have at least some control over what
we spend in terms of keeping within our family budget. Certain
necessity items would be exempt from taxation: food, basic
clothing (say items under $100 retail), medical supplies, heating
fuel, childcare, education. Items in a luxury category might be
taxed at a higher rate. All commercial transactions involving
nonexempt items, at all levels along the process from manufacture
to retail, could be taxed, as well as all service transactions
(excluding necessary services, such as medical care, etc.).
Business people already must keep tax records and many states
already have sales taxes, so the recordkeeping aspect should not
be a problem. Regular wage earners, as opposed to those who sell
products or services, would no longer need to be plagued by the
need to keep records of all their financial transactions, nor
would employers need to keep tax withholding records for their
employees. High duties on major purchases brought in from other
countries could help to keep those with the means from buying
abroad to avoid taxation (or perhaps other countries could also
adopt this means of taxation). Savings on the government's end
might be effected by doing away with subsidies for certain
groups, such as farmers and oil producers, when they have the
advantage of tax exempt products and fewer taxes to pay in
production. Hopefully, this would also result in lower prices in
general for such commodities at the consumers' level. Therefore
we could have a turn around of the present system of the lower
income people supporting the higher in terms of tax liability.
Another suggestion I have would add greatly to the national
income and lower the high costs of prisons, courts, law
enforcement, and social services.
We have been hearing for quite some time about drug abuse and the
so-called war on drugs. Governmental interferences in our lives
of absurd proportions have been suggested and implemented in this
mad campaign. In response to those who blame illicit drug users
for the growth of the "drug problem" on the demand side, you are
entirely missing the point. Look into history or psychology and
you will clearly see that people have always used the substances
available to them to ease their anxieties, self-medicate for
chronic or medically untreatable pain, relax, recreate,
celebrate, become more sensitized to art/beauty/relationships,
become less sensitized to poverty/ugliness/hunger, search for
spiritual fulfillment, change their consciousness in one way or
another. For most of history this was an incidental aspect of
human behavior. The problem with the illicit drugs (not to be
confused with the drugs this society condones, for whatever
accidental reason) is the profit motive resulting from their
artificially inflated prices (a direct result of the laws and
enforcement of same against their use or sale) which lead to
bloody battles among those who want to make those profits, and
between the profiteers and the law enforcement personnel who
harass them. What most people who complain about the "drug
problem" are afraid of is the violence and street crime resulting
from this profit motive. Profit-driven violence is only being
exacerbated by law-enforcement's efforts to crack down on drugs.
To lower the incidence of serious abuse of drug use, wouldn't it
be more practical to control the legal use of these substances?
We could heavily regulate sales centers for those substances we
choose to designate. Perhaps limit the number of such centers in
each given area, regulate their locations (say not within a
certain distance of schools or other chosen community
facilities), regulate the age of patrons with mandatory ID
checks, regulate the amount to be sold per transaction, regulate
the prices while still keeping these prices well below those of
the current illicit market, include heavy taxation and use tax
revenues from the sale of these substances to fund various
treatment centers, substance use/abuse education and medical
programs (after which any additional tax revenues may be used to
help pay for other desired programs), disallow advertising of
these products, stringently disallow public use and driving under
the influence (along the lines of current policies against drunk
driving, we could have laws against driving under the influence
of any debilitating substance with stringent penalties like loss
of the driver's license and car and substantial fines). Drug
bars could be licensed to give people a legitimate place in which
to enjoy these substances with others, and regulated to disallow
minors, require that sales be only for on-premises use, etc. (We
could also require for the staff of these drug bars expertise in
controlling and mitigating conflicts, both physical and
psychological. It would benefit both the community and the
customers of these bars to maintain a positive environment.)
Through tax revenues our government programs would benefit from
those who desire these products, rather than organized crime.
Meanwhile, a system of highly regulated legal distribution would
allow for the kind of knowledge and control which is impossible
under the existing situation of uncontrolled illicit
transactions. Educational programs against drug use could be
refined and expanded. Minors would not be pressured into drug
use or sales by criminals seeking expanding profits or seeking
less legally liable dupes to do their work for them, or by their
own desires for otherwise unimaginable wealth; and people in
general who use these substances would not be forced to deal with
profit-hungry, unscrupulous criminals and possibly tainted
products. Drug treatment programs could be made much more
available; and without legal considerations some secret drug
users might be less intimidated about going for treatment. More
room would be available in prisons and courts for other kinds of
criminals if less were taken up by drug-related crimes; and there
would be less violence in our communities without drug-profit
related crimes. If we like, harsher penalties could be
legislated against criminals who commit crimes while under the
influence of drugs (including alcohol) to both prevent these
criminals from trying to use their drug-induced misjudgment as an
excuse for their crimes and increase the general idea of
responsible use of mind-altering substances. Public resources
now being desperately and ultimately ineffectually thrown into
the anti-drug "war" would be available for use against the social
problems we all recognize such as homelessness, poverty,
intrafamilial violence, lack of quality education, et al., the
root causes of addiction. Furthermore, a more enlightened
attitude toward drug use might allow for those who do choose to
make recreational use of drugs to be better informed about the
consequences of their choice and, therefore, allow them to pursue
these activities more safely and responsibly.
About the criminal justice system generally, our societal
response to crime: Crime can be divided into the distinct
categories of violent and nonviolent -- to be handled in very
different ways. People who impose violence on others when
considerations such as self-defense or defense of others are not
involved are dangerous, and in most cases need to be removed from
society. People who break laws made for the protection of
society or various groups within the society, but who do not
impose violence on others, can be dealt with in various
noncustodial ways, depending on the circumstances of the
individual cases. Within the framework of these two distinct
categories, there are various levels of seriousness which should
lead to various levels of response. On the other end of the
criminal-victim dyad, is the currently underrepresented victim.
For true justice to be effected, the needs of the victim need to
be addressed and redressed. We speak of criminals "paying
their debt to society." Wouldn't it make more sense in terms
of justice, retribution, punishment and deterrence (theoretically
the reasons for criminal prosecution) for them to, in a very real
and financial sense, pay their debt to their victims? As part of
their sentence, perpetrators could be required to return to
the victim that which their crime took from him or her (to the
extent possible). One way to do this might be to include
crime-related debt, as some child support payments are handled,
within the purview of the IRS (which seems better equipped than
the criminal justice system to see that payment is made). In any
case, society must see that the victim is taken care of, as
an integral part of the criminal justice system.
In regard to preventing crime in the first place: most schools
have "guidance counsellors" to help students plan for careers,
choose courses, and sometimes with personal problems. Why not
expand this service to truly provide guidance for people in a
community who may have personal, family, health, psychological or
just growing up problems of all sorts. These counsellors could
be primarily community volunteers who are trained as active
listeners and equipped with referral sources, but who are
basically there to be there, to give people somewhere they can go
easily, with no fuss or embarrassment that might be associated
with seeing mental health professionals. We could provide space
in the schools and hospitals and whatever places in the community
people gather. School children would be given an orientation
about these counsellors and told to use the service frequently,
whenever they just need to talk. Expense in funds, space, etc.
would be comparatively small, could be paid for through community
fund-raising efforts, and would certainly be repaid many times
over in the help to stop potential problems when they are still
in formative stages. This program could deal with dispute
mediation between neighbors or within families or between
students and school personnel, etc. Letting people know that
their problems and disputes are being taken seriously, that their
community cares, in itself could do alot to diffuse antisocial
feelings. It could also help to bring together people into
community, in contrast to the current seeming disassociative
trends, which could spiral into all kinds of intracommunity
projects for the improvement of lives and society in general.
I have a lot of problems with the US school system and have
long thought that a better way to educate our kids and
ourselves would be more on the 60's "free school" model
-- community storefront schools where people teach what
they know and learn what they want to learn. A lot of so-called
laziness is simply nonengagement in boring lessons without much
immediate relevance to the student. A lot more is probably general
fatigue from lack of exercise. Kids should be out moving, actively
building energy and neuronal connections doing and playing,
engaged in hands-on learning.
Actively working together on projects, teaching each other as
they go along, would exponentially increase learning, as we know
that one of the best ways to learn is to teach. Furthermore,
community in general would be greatly strengthened by having
this kind of helpful, enjoyable, sharing interaction and a
place for such gathering.
Any group that considers itself a community could put this
kind of thing together, even in a small way. We could just develop
workshops/learning groups (however the individual group wants
to conceive it) in our homes with our cohorts and teach and
learn what we are interested in. We could use the home
schooling exception to compulsory education to teach our kids
the way we know is best for them. Even if we send our kids
to public schools, we can provide these kinds of experiences
for them during their off-school time. We might even consider
converting the public schools into community schools -- without
federal money or mandates -- to be run by members of the community
(however they conceive themselves) to teach real skills and
learning tools as well as cooperation through a variety of
individual and group projects, field trips, lectures and
demonstrations, interactive workshops. A series of tests could even
be provided to measure acquirement of basic skills like reading,
writing, arithmetic, citizenship, basic health care -- for a
certificate of graduation -- to be taken at whatever age the
individual feels ready to graduate. This schooling would not
be limited to people of a particular age group, but available
to the whole community.
Even if we have no such community project available,
we certainly have the opportunity to teach our kids the truth
and how to find it for themselves as a normal part of our
daily relationships with them.
Why do we assume that it is the height of virtue to be
"hard-working"? Certainly it is a great good to uphold one's
responsibilities as a member of a community -- to be reliable,
trustworthy, and conscientious, to carry one's fair share of the
weight. But lauding someone as "hard-working," implying
industriousness well above the norm, implying that by virtue of
those extra hours, that extra push of energy directed toward
labor, one becomes deserving of ... what? A larger share of the
communal pie? Extra consideration and privileges? A ready
excuse for any and all activities that cannot be accommodated due
to the extra time and energy given to that hard work? Whatever
that work may consist of? Is that the message, the prioritization
that we truly want for our community? That hard work trumps
loving kindness or easy-going goodwill or all or the kinds of
play that leads to discovery or artistic imaginings or
camaraderie or taking joy in life? Or inspiring others to be
happy, loving,spiritually attuned? Yes, hard work can be it's
own reward, when one is working hard at somethign personally
meaningful, or something of great public value. But is it really
the virtue to which we most want to aspire?
As we know, money is just a symbol agreed upon within the socio-
economic structure of society. Governmental bodies have as part of
their role the creating, distributing, evaluating of this eco-
symbol. We have seen monies based on gold or other precious
commodities, but these commodities are also in this sense symbols for
a rate of exchange. We do not need these commodities, or even
printed paper, to have a rate of exchange. It is all symbolic. It
is all in our heads, our collective agreements. In fact, to a large
extent today our economic transactions are based on computer files in
cyberspace. We have evolved a credit economy with an awful lot of
accumulating debt on national, business, and personal levels. Much
more Neptunian than Saturnian. Are there good reasons not to, are
here not excellent reasons to, overhaul the underlying economic
structure to create one to better fit with the goal of creating and
distributing goods and services? Instead of collecting taxes to pay
for their workers and projects, why should government not simply pay
their own workers (and here I refer to civil servants, not politicians.
I believe political office holders should serve temporarily, even
part-time, with no pay beyond a stipend for expenses, but that's
another rant.), pay for needed materials, with funds created by the
government for this purpose -- to arrange for the creation and
maintenance of a proper infrastructure? The symbolic means of
exchange could then be distributed through these workers (trickle
down with a twist)when they pay for goods and services of the
private market. If the true wealth of a nation is the value of the
labor of its citizens, this would be a more logical and effective
method in accord with that consensus reality.
No comments:
Post a Comment